Iran is reviewing a US proposal to end the Gulf war but has ruled out direct talks with Washington, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said yesterday — signalling cautious openness to a diplomatic resolution whilst stopping well short of a ceasefire commitment.
Araghchi confirmed that US President Donald Trump’s 15-point proposal, delivered via Pakistan, had been passed to senior Iranian authorities.
However, he stressed that the exchange of messages through mediators “does not mean negotiations with the US”. The American proposal reportedly demands the removal of Iran’s highly enriched uranium stocks, a halt to enrichment, curbs on its ballistic missile programme, and an end to funding for regional allies.
The White House struck a sharply different tone, threatening further military escalation. Press secretary Karoline Leavitt warned that if Iran failed to recognise it had been “defeated militarily”, President Trump would ensure it was “hit harder than ever before”. The Pentagon is meanwhile reported to be deploying thousands of airborne troops to the Gulf, adding to two Marine contingents already en route.
Global equity markets rose and oil prices fell on news of the proposal, with investors hoping for an end to a conflict that has disrupted energy supplies and stoked inflation fears.
On the ground, fighting continued unabated. Israel described fresh strikes on Iranian naval shipyards, while Iran’s Revolutionary Guards claimed new attacks against Israel and US bases in Kuwait, Jordan, and Bahrain. A residential area in Tehran was also reported struck.